The good folks at Google Maps are letting folks play the classic arcade game on streets of your choosing.

All you have to do: Go to Google Maps here. Type in a city packed with lots of roads (it only works when there are enough roads for Pac-Man to eat through) and click the Pac-Man icon on the bottom left.

Then just press play. You'll be chomping your way through Canton or Fells or downtown in no time.

Trevor Noah performing at the SA cricket awards held at the Sandton convention centre in Johannesburg.

Trevor Noah performing at the SA cricket awards held at the Sandton convention centre in Johannesburg. (AFP/Getty Images)

A day after Trevor Noah was declared the new host of "The Daily Show," his graphic tweets targeting women and Jews are causing a social media backlash and Comedy Central is defending its newest late-night star.

By Tuesday, Trevor Noah was a trending topic on Twitter as he drew fire for jokes described as tasteless, hateful — and unfunny. Roseanne Barr was among those calling out the 31-year-old South African comic, who has an international following and two million Twitter followers.

The Idle Hour owners Brendan Finnerty and Randal Etheridge break down their bar's current situation.

The Idle Hour owners Brendan Finnerty and Randal Etheridge break down their bar's current situation.

In late December, the Idle Hour — a celebrated corner bar in Riverside for more than a decade — closed unexpectedly due to a structural issue involving a buckling wall behind the back bar.

Owners Brendan Finnerty and Randal Etheridge said safety concerns for staff and patrons left them with no other choice.

After considering many options, the owners held two fundraising events (one at Little Havana on Jan. 31 and the other at the Ottobar on Feb. 28) that raised approximately $14,000, Etheridge said Friday afternoon.

It was enough to keep their dream of reopening the Idle Hour alive, but not for much else. The money was used to pay outstanding bills for alcohol distributors and mortgage payments. (Etheridge said he and Finnerty own the building next to the bar as well.)

In a final effort to fix the bar's problems and move forward, Etheridge and Finnerty launched the “Save the Idle Hour” campaign on the crowd-funding website Indiegogo this week.

Will Looking's Patrick (Jonathan Groff, left) and Richie (Raul Castillo) end up together? HBO, which has canceled the show, has promised to air a "final chapter" as a special.

Will Looking's Patrick (Jonathan Groff, left) and Richie (Raul Castillo) end up together? HBO, which has canceled the show, has promised to air a "final chapter" as a special. (John P. Johnson/HBO)

There will be no third season for HBO's gay-themed series "Looking," which has been canceled, HBO announced March 25.

Instead, a "final chapter" will be aired as an HBO special in order to wrap up the show's various storylines, it said.

"After two years of following Patrick and his tight-knit group of friends as they explored San Francisco in search of love and lasting relationships, HBO will present the final chapter of their journey as a special," HBO said in a statement. "We look forward to sharing this adventure with the shows loyal fans."

An HBO spokeswoman said more details about the special -- such as its length and air date -- are not yet available.

The news will no doubt be met with varying degrees of regret and derision by the gay community, which has largely been split over the series and whether it represented gay culture and lives in an interesting, accurate and entertaining way.

But it should also be met with a sense of loss by anyone who believes unapologetic and...

Kara Dennison’s a Whovian — a fan of the long-running British sci-fi series “Doctor Who” — because you never know who or what is going to show up.

Michael O’Brien loves it because it has never let low budgets or the limitations of conventional narrative get in the way. For Kathryn Patterson, the show’s become a good friend that helped get her through a family crisis.

And Connor Butler? Connor’s only 6, a little young to be understanding why he likes something. But in costume, wielding one of the doctor’s sonic screwdrivers with serious authority, he’s clearly a big-time fan. “He’s fun,” Connor explains, and what good Whovian is going to argue that point?

These are heady times for area "Doctor Who" fans. The show is still going strong, more than a half-century after its debut on the BBC. And this weekend, the first "Doctor Who" fan convention to hit the area in decades is set for Baltimore County's Hunt Valley Inn.

Scores of fans will be able to meet two of the 13 actors who have played...